China is conducting an extensive seabed-mapping and ocean-monitoring effort across the Pacific, Indian, and Arctic oceans, according to Reuters.

The activity involves dozens of research vessels tracking underwater terrain in areas close to US and allied military positions, including waters near Taiwan, Guam, the Philippines, and key routes such as the Malacca Strait.

https://www.navalnews.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/China-Sea-Wing-UUV-Glider-Drone-Cutaway-scaled.jpg

Part of the effort also involves deploying and maintaining underwater sensors that collect data with potential military relevance.

According to naval experts cited by the news outlet, information on underwater terrain and ocean conditions is critical for submarine navigation, concealment, and detection of adversary vessels.

Data reviewed over several years shows vessels following structured survey patterns to map the seabed in detail, with analysts suggesting the effort may be linked to China’s approach of integrating civilian research with military development.

https://cdn.britannica.com/36/189236-050-C9CDC387/Map-Indo-Pacific-Marine-Reserves.jpg

https://img-s-msn-com.akamaized.net/tenant/amp/entityid/AA1VgIpL.img?w=1920&h=1080&m=4&q=100

https://www.navalnews.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/China-XXLUUV-Underwater-Drones-Range-Pacific-1024x552.jpg

One example is the Dong Fang Hong 3, a research vessel operated by Ocean University of China, which conducted repeated missions between 2024 and 2025, officially described as climate research and seabed analysis.

Data, Sensors, and Submarines

The network of sensors supporting the mapping activity collects data on temperature, salinity, currents, and sub-sea movement.

https://pub.mdpi-res.com/jmse/jmse-11-01119/article_deploy/html/images/jmse-11-01119-g001.png?1685021837

These factors affect how sound travels underwater and are critical for sonar performance, shaping how submarines detect or avoid detection.

US officials told Reuters that this type of data can support submarine positioning and the deployment of seabed systems used to monitor undersea activity.

As the dataset expands, it could improve China’s ability to operate submarines more effectively and track those of other navies, potentially narrowing the long-standing informational advantage of the US Navy in the undersea domain.

The Defense Post / ABC Flash Point News 2026.

5 1 vote
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest

2 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Donnchadh
Donnchadh
Guest
April 1, 2026 02:48

How America can complain about undersea trackers is beyond belief , they constantly lay them down themselves and have done for a very long time ,now when its done to them they cry out –“foul” ! – total hypocrisy. Dont agree ?? – check out the Baltic Sea –filled to the brim with undersea NATO trackers and thats not the only place . Honesty has died a long time ago in the west -lies/propaganda /sanctions and more and more wars and only two countries are hard at it the USA and UK – forget protecting civilians “shock & awe ”… Read more »

Lady Shadow
Lady Shadow
Member
Reply to  Donnchadh
April 1, 2026 08:11

Loud & Clear.